RightScale 2016
STATE OF THE CLOUD REPORT Hybrid Cloud Adoption Ramps
as Cloud Users and Cloud Providers Mature
®
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Executive Summary
In January 2016, RightScale surveyed 1,060 technical professionals across a broad cross-section of
organizations about their adoption of cloud computing.
The 2016 State of the Cloud Survey identified several key findings:
Hybrid cloud adoption grew significantly.
• Private cloud adoption increased from 63 percent to 77 percent, driving hybrid cloud adoption
up from 58 percent to 71 percent year-over-year.
• 82 percent of enterprises have a hybrid cloud strategy, holding steady from 2015.
• 95 percent of organizations surveyed are running applications or experimenting with
infrastructure-as-a-service.
Cloud users leverage 6 clouds on average.
• Cloud users are running applications in an average of 1.5 public clouds and 1.7 private clouds.
• They are experimenting with an additional 1.5 public clouds and 1.3 private clouds.
More enterprise workloads shift to cloud, especially private cloud.
• 17 percent of enterprises now have more than 1,000 VMs in public cloud, up from 13 percent
in 2015.
• Private cloud showed even stronger growth with 31 percent of enterprises running more
than 1,000 VMs, up from 22 percent in 2015.
Enterprises increase alignment on role of central IT teams in cloud use.
• Enterprise business units increasingly acknowledge the role of central IT to set policies
(up from 31 percent to 44 percent year-over-year), select public clouds (up from 34 percent
to 42 percent), and select private cloud technologies (up from 35 percent to 44 percent).
• With greater alignment comes progress on cloud governance, as 38 percent of respondents
have now established approval policies for cloud, up from 30 percent in 2015.
Security is no longer the top cloud challenge.
• Lack of resources/expertise is now the #1 cloud challenge (cited by 32 percent), supplanting
security (cited by 29 percent).
• Even the most security conscious respondents — enterprise central IT teams and security pros
— no longer see security as the #1 challenge.
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Cloud cost challenges increase, but optimization efforts lag.
• 26 percent of respondents identify cloud cost management as a significant challenge, a steady
increase each year from 18 percent in 2013.
• Cloud cost management provides a significant opportunity for savings, since few companies
are taking critical actions to optimize cloud costs, such as shutting down unused workloads
or selecting lower-cost clouds or regions.
DevOps grows and Docker spreads like wildfire, especially in the enterprise.
• Overall DevOps adoption rises from 66 to 74 percent, with enterprises reaching 81 percent.
• Overall Docker adoption more than doubles to 27 percent vs. 13 percent in 2015; and another
35 percent have plans to use Docker.
• An even higher percentage of enterprises use Docker (29 percent) and plan to use it
(38 percent).
• Use of Puppet and Chef also grow with each now used by 32 percent of respondents.
Ansible makes strong gains, used by 20 percent of respondents vs. 10 percent in 2015.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) continues to lead in public cloud adoption, but Azure (Iaas and
PaaS) gain ground.
• Overall, AWS is used by 57 percent of respondents, flat from last year. Enterprise adoption of
AWS grew from 50 percent to 56 percent while adoption by smaller businesses fell slightly from
61 percent to 58 percent.
• Azure IaaS grows strongly from 12 percent to 17 percent adoption, while Azure PaaS grows
from 9 percent to 13 percent.
• Combined, 20 percent of respondents use Azure (IaaS, PaaS, or both) as compared to
57 percent for AWS.
Private cloud adoption grows across all providers.
• VMware vSphere continues to lead with strong year-over-year growth. 44 percent of all
respondents report they use it as a private cloud.
• OpenStack and VMware vCloud Suite both show strong growth and remain tied at 19 percent
adoption overall. VMware vCloud Suite holds the #2 slot among enterprises while OpenStack
is #2 among businesses with fewer than 1,000 employees.
• Bare-metal cloud was included in the survey for the the first time and is used by 15 percent
of respondents.
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Key Survey Stats:
All respondents = 1,060
• Enterprise respondents (1,000+ employees) = 433
• SMB respondents (<1,000 employees) = 627
Margin of error = 3.07 percent.
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of this Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. You are free to share and
make commercial use of this work as long as you attribute the RightScale 2016 State of
the Cloud Report as stipulated in the terms of the license.
Respondent Demographics
Methodology
In January 2016, RightScale conducted its annual State of the Cloud Survey. The survey questioned
technical professionals across a broad cross-section of organizations about their adoption of
cloud infrastructure. The 1,060 respondents range from technical executives to managers and
practitioners and represent organizations of varying sizes across many industries. Respondents
represent companies across the cloud spectrum, including both users (17 percent) and non-users
(83 percent) of RightScale solutions. Their answers provide a comprehensive perspective on the
state of the cloud today.
Respondents by Company Size
Respondents by Industry
Respondents by Region
Level of RespondentsRole of Respondents
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Cloud Maturity of Respondents
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The Cloud Maturity Model
In this report, RightScale uses its Cloud Maturity Model to segment and analyze organizations
based on their levels of cloud adoption. The Cloud Maturity Model identifies four distinct stages
of cloud maturity. Denoting cloud adoption by organizations from least to greatest experience,
the four stages are:
Cloud Watchers are organizations that are developing cloud strategies and plans but have not yet
deployed applications into the cloud. Cloud Watchers want to evaluate available cloud options and
determine which applications to implement in the cloud.
Cloud Beginners are new to cloud computing and are working on proof-of-concepts or initial cloud
projects. Cloud Beginners want to gain experience with cloud in order to determine future projects.
Cloud Explorers have multiple projects or applications already deployed in the cloud. Cloud
Explorers are focused on improving and expanding their use of cloud resources.
Cloud Focused businesses are heavily using cloud infrastructure and are looking to optimize cloud
operations as well as cloud costs.
The survey on which the RightScale 2016 State of the Cloud Report is based includes organizations
across all the stages of cloud maturity.
Enterprise Cloud Maturity 2016 vs. 2015
Cloud Maturity by Company Size
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When comparing cloud adoption in large and small companies, it is interesting to note that
while smaller organizations are more likely to be Cloud Focused, a larger portion of enterprise
respondents are in the two most mature stages — Cloud Explorers and Cloud Focused.
In the last year, many enterprises have moved from the Cloud Explorers stage to the Cloud Focused
stage — now representing 25 percent of respondents vs. 18 percent in 2015.
Cloud Maturity by Company Size
Role of Cloud Architect Emerges
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As cloud maturity has increased, the role of cloud architect has emerged. Among respondents with
an architect role, 40 percent identify themselves as cloud architects.
95% of Respondents Are Using Cloud
Respondents Adopting Cloud 2016 vs. 2015
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Key Findings
Significant growth in hybrid cloud adoption. In the twelve months since the last State of the Cloud Survey, we’ve seen strong growth in
hybrid cloud adoption as public cloud users added private cloud resource pools. 77 percent of
respondents are now adopting private cloud up from 63 percent last year. As a result, use of hybrid
cloud environments has grown to 71 percent. In total, 95 percent of respondents are now using
cloud up from 93 percent in 2015.
Enterprise Cloud Strategy
Enterprise Multi-Cloud Strategy 2016 vs. 2015
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Enterprises hold firm on hybrid cloud strategy. The percentage of enterprises that have a strategy to use multiple clouds held steady at 82 percent
with 55 percent planning on hybrid. There was a slight increase in the number of enterprises
planning for multiple public clouds (up from 13 percent to 16 percent) and a concurrent decrease
in those planning for multiple private clouds (down from 14 percent to 11 percent).
Top Priority for Enterprise Central IT
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Among enterprises, the central IT team is typically tasked with assembling this hybrid portfolio
of “supported” clouds. The top priority for these central IT teams is to leverage hybrid cloud
(29 percent), which aligns with the predominant strategy.
Cloud users leverage 6 clouds on average — 3 public and 3 private. Companies using cloud are leveraging 3 public clouds and 3 private clouds. On average, they are
running applications on 1.5 public clouds and experimenting with an additional 1.5 public clouds.
They are also running applications on 1.7 private clouds and experimenting with an additional
1.3 private clouds.
Number of VMs Enterprises are Running in Public Cloud
Number of VMs Enterprises are Running in Cloud
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More enterprise workloads shift to cloud, especially private cloud. More enterprise workloads moved to both public and private cloud over the last year. The number
of enterprises running more than 1,000 virtual machines (VMs) in public cloud increased from
13 percent to 17 percent, while those running more than 1,000 VMs in private cloud grew from
22 percent to 31 percent. In comparison, enterprises with virtualized environments containing
more than 1,000 VMs, grew from 42 percent to 48 percent. The growth in private cloud workloads
also may include long-standing virtualized environments that have been enhanced and relabeled
as a private cloud.
Number of VMs Enterprises are Running in Virtualized Environments
Enterprise Respondents with 1000+ VMs in Cloud
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Number of VMs Enterprises are Running in Private Cloud
95% of Respondents Are Using CloudCloud Workloads by Cloud Type
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Enterprises run more cloud workloads in private, SMBs run more in public. Looking at the split of cloud workloads between public and private, enterprises with more than
1,000 employees are skewed toward private cloud while SMBs with less than 1,000 employees lean
toward public cloud. 53 percent of SMBs run a majority of cloud workloads in public environments,
compared to 32 percent of enterprises. Note that this split is only among cloud workloads and
doesn’t include non-cloud workloads.
Enterprise Views of Role of IT in Cloud
Enterprise BU Views of Role of Central IT
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Enterprises increase alignment on role of central IT teams in cloud use. Within larger enterprises, the role of central IT teams in cloud has been evolving over the last few
years. Early use of cloud was mostly driven by individual development teams using public cloud
for specific applications or projects. As enterprise cloud use increased, central IT began to take
the role as broker of cloud services in order to ensure appropriate management, governance, and
control. However, in past years, respondents within enterprise business units expressed reluctance
to secede control to central IT.
In 2016, business units within the enterprises increasingly agreed that central IT should play a
role in selecting, brokering, and governing cloud services. 44 percent now believe that central IT
should set policies for cloud use vs. 31 percent in 2015. They also expect central IT to select public
clouds (up from 34 percent to 42 percent) and private cloud technologies (up from 35 percent
to 44 percent).
Enterprises with Key Areas of Cloud Governance Defined
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As enterprises increased alignment around the role of central IT in cloud adoption, IT organizations
also made progress on cloud governance in the last year. Enterprises improved governance across
a variety of areas, but the greatest gains were made in approval policies for cloud, which increased
from 30 to 38 percent. Enterprises also made progress on defining the portfolio of clouds that
can be used (from 37 to 43 percent) and the benefit or value the company wants to achieve
(from 58 to 63 percent). There is still room for improvement, since fewer than half of enterprises
have implemented many of these aspects of cloud governance.
Cloud Benefits 2016 vs. 2015
Respondents that Gain Speed Benefits from Cloud
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Cloud users gain speed benefits. In 2016, more cloud users reported speed benefits from cloud. The two benefits that had the largest
increase were faster access to infrastructure, which grew from 57 to 62 percent, and faster time-to-
market, which grew from 48 to 52 percent.
Over the last three years, the respondents reporting these two “speed” benefits have
increased significantly.
Cloud Benefits for Cloud Beginners 2016 vs. 2015
Benefits Grow with Cloud Maturity
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Cloud beginners see significant gains in benefits. In 2016, Cloud Beginners saw significant gains in cloud benefits vs. 2015. The largest gains
were in business continuity (up from 17 to 27 percent), scalability (up from 30 to 36 percent),
higher availability (up from 26 to 31 percent), and faster access to infrastructure (up from
32 to 37 percent). These gains indicate that as cloud providers and best practices have matured,
new cloud users are able to get to value more easily.
As in prior years, greater cloud experience continues to unlock increasingly greater levels of value
for organizations. Respondents report a growth in the benefits that their organizations get from
cloud computing as they mature.
Cloud Challenges 2016 vs. 2015
Enterprise Central IT Rating Cloud Security as Significant Challenge
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Lack of resources/expertise supplants security as the top cloud challenge. Since the State of the Cloud Report in 2013, security has been cited as the top challenge in cloud.
Lack of resources/expertise increased from 27 percent last year to 32 percent this year to supplant
security as the largest concern. As more organizations are placing more workloads in the cloud,
the need for expertise has grown. Additional training of IT and development staff will be critical
to helping address this challenge.
Enterprise central IT teams, who typically have the most responsibility for security have reported
security as a significant challenge at higher rates. However there has been a significant decline in
security concerns among this group over the last few years from 47 percent to 37 percent.
Challenges Decrease with Cloud Maturity
Top 5 Challenges Change with Cloud Maturity
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As in prior years, cloud challenges decline as users gain more experience and cloud
maturity increases.
The top challenge, lack of resources/expertise, is consistent across Cloud Beginners, Cloud
Explorers, and Cloud Focused. Security decreases as a challenge as users gain cloud experience.
It is ranked as the #2 challenge by Cloud Beginners (35 percent), the #4 challenge by Cloud
Explorers (28 percent), and the #5 challenge by Cloud Focused users. Slicing and dicing the data,
we found that security is not the #1 challenge among any subgroup except for Cloud Watchers —
those who are only in the planning stages of cloud adoption.
Respondents that Say Managing Cloud Costs is a Significant Challenge
How Companies are Optimizing Cloud Costs
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Cloud cost challenges increase, but optimization efforts lag. 26 percent of respondents identify cloud cost management as a significant challenge in 2016,
a steady increase each year from 18 percent in 2013.
Improving cloud cost management provides a significant opportunity for savings, since few
companies are taking critical actions to optimize cloud costs, such as shutting down unused
workloads or selecting lower-cost cloud or regions. The most common optimization action is
monitoring utilization and rightsizing instances (45 percent of enterprises and SMBs). 36 percent
of SMBs are purchasing AWS Reserved Instances (RIs) to save money, but only 21 percent are
tracking purchased RIs to make sure that they are being fully utilized. When purchased RIs are
not fully used, the savings decline, and the RI can end up costing more than on-demand instances.
How Companies are Optimizing Cloud Costs
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When we slice respondents based on whether they believe that cloud cost management is a
significant challenge, we find that those who see cloud costs as a challenge are actually doing
less to optimize cloud costs. For example only 42 percent of those who say cost is a challenge are
monitoring utilization, compared to 49 percent of those who say cost is not a challenge.
Top 2016 Initiatives Depend on Cloud Maturity
Cloud Initiatives in 2016
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Cloud Beginners plan to do more in cloud; Cloud Focused plan to optimize. Looking forward to 2016, the top 3 initiatives are moving more workloads to cloud, optimizing
existing cloud use (cost savings), and expanding the public clouds used. Enterprises, who generally
have a larger number of applications, are more focused on moving more of those workloads to
cloud (57 percent). SMBs cite optimizing existing cloud use to gain cost savings (43 percent) as
their #1 initiative.
2016 priorities differ based on cloud maturity. Cloud Beginners are focused on moving more
workloads to cloud (43 percent), implementing a cloud first strategy (40 percent), and expanding
public clouds used (37 percent). The top priorities of Cloud Focused respondents are optimizing
existing cloud use to save costs (62 percent), CI/CD in the cloud (52 percent), and expanding
public clouds used (50 percent).
DevOps Adoption Up in 2016
Enterprise vs. SMB DevOps Adoption
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DevOps grows and Docker spreads like wildfire, especially in the enterprise. The twin trends of DevOps and cloud adoption are closely linked. As companies seek to drive
digital business by delivering new software applications and features more quickly, they look
to both DevOps and cloud as key enablers. DevOps is now being adopted by 74 percent of
organizations, up from 66 percent in 2015.
Larger organizations are embracing DevOps at even higher rates, with 81 percent adopting
DevOps vs. 70 percent of SMBs.
Enterprise Adoption of DevOps
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However, within the enterprise, DevOps adoption may not be ubiquitous. 21 percent of enterprises
are adopting DevOps company-wide, 31 percent adopt at the business unit or division level, and
29 percent by individual projects or teams.
As part of adopting DevOps processes, many companies choose to implement configuration
management tools that allow them to standardize and automate deployment and configuration of
servers and applications. In the last two years, companies have also begun to embrace container
technologies, such as Docker, to help them standardize and streamline the way they package and
deploy code.
Respondents Using DevOps Tools
Respondents Using DevOps Tools
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Chef and Puppet are now each in use by 32 percent of respondents, while Docker is being used by
27 percent and Ansible by 20 percent. An additional 35 percent of respondents plan to use Docker,
which is evidence of the level of attention and interest that Docker has garnered in a very short
time period.
Container orchestration tools are still in the early phases of adoption with the top 3 being
Kubernetes (7 percent), Swarm (6 percent), and Mesosphere (4 percent).
Docker has shown phenomenal growth year-over-year, with more than double the number of
respondents using it (13 to 27 percent). Ansible also doubled (10 to 20 percent), Puppet showed
strong growth (24 to 32 percent), and Chef grew as well (28 to 32 percent).
Enterprise Respondents Using DevOps Tools
Enterprises Using DevOps Tools
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Among enterprises, Puppet (42 percent) leads Chef (37 percent) for configuration management,
with Ansible at 23 percent. Docker, which offers a different approach to code delivery, is used by
29 percent of enterprises with another 38 percent planning to use it.
Year-over-year, Ansible showed the strongest growth among enterprises (8 to 23 percent) while
Docker doubled on a larger base (14 to 29 percent). Puppet, Chef, and Salt also showed solid
growth over the last 12 months.
SMB Respondents Using DevOps Tools
SMBs Using DevOps Tools
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Among SMBs, Chef (28 percent) has a slight lead over Docker (26 percent) and Puppet
(25 percent). Interest in Docker is strong, with another 33 percent planning to use it.
In comparison with last year, Docker doubled (13 to 26 percent), Puppet (19 to 25 percent) and
Ansible (11 to 17 percent) showed strong growth, while Chef grew slightly (26 to 28 percent).
Public Cloud Adoption Expands Across Clouds and Private Gains Steam
2015 was a big year for major public cloud providers and private cloud technologies. Cloud providers
continued to add services, costs continued to drop, and overall adoption of cloud increased.
We asked respondents to tell us which clouds they were using and whether they were running
applications in the cloud, experimenting with the cloud, planning to use the cloud, or had no plans
to use the cloud. Most respondents are using more than one cloud so totals will add up to more than
100 percent. These results indicate whether a respondent is using any cloud but do not specify the
number of applications that are running in each cloud.
AWS still leads in public cloud; Azure gains ground.As expected, AWS continues to lead in public cloud adoption, with 57 percent of respondents
currently running applications in this cloud. The percentage of respondents running applications in
AWS was flat this year although, per reports from Amazon, the number of workloads in AWS (and
hence the revenue) is increasing. Azure IaaS and PaaS both showed increased adoption, narrowing
the gap with AWS. Due to its strategy change toward managed cloud services, Rackspace was not
included in this year’s survey. DigitalOcean (5 percent) and Oracle Cloud (4 percent) were added
to the survey for the first time this year.
We can also gauge interest and potential for future adoption by measuring respondents that are
experimenting or planning to use particular clouds. This year Azure IaaS and PaaS stand out with
a higher percentage of respondents experimenting or planning to use those clouds. This could
indicate potential for Azure to increase adoption in future years as these experiments and plans
come to fruition.
Public Cloud Adoption
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Public Cloud Adoption
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This year, we looked at IaaS and PaaS for Google and Azure separately as well as combined. The
separate IaaS and PaaS numbers reveal how each service is doing on its own, while the combined
numbers show the number of unique respondents that use any Azure (IaaS or PaaS or both) or any
Google (IaaS or PaaS or both) service. Because many users leverage both IaaS and PaaS offerings
from these vendors, the combined adoption is less than the sum of the adoption numbers for each
individual service.
Whereas 17 percent are using Azure IaaS and 13 percent are using Azure PaaS, 20 percent are using
either or both Azure offerings. 7 percent are using Google App Engine and 6 percent are using
Google IaaS, while 10 percent are using either or both of Google IaaS/PaaS.
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Comparing this year’s data with last, we see that the percentage of respondents using AWS
remained flat. Azure IaaS and Azure PaaS made the largest gains, helping to shrink the gap with
AWS. VMware vCloud Air and IBM SoftLayer both showed small increases (up 2 percent), which
are within the margin of error.
Among enterprises (1,000+ employees), AWS grew its lead over last year, now with adoption at 56
percent compared to 50 percent last year. Microsoft Azure IaaS and PaaS are in 2nd and 3rd place
at 23 percent and 17 percent. Interest in future projects (the combination of experimenting and
planning to use) shows the most interest in Azure IaaS (41 percent) and Azure PaaS (37 percent).
Public Cloud Adoption 2016 vs. 2015
Enterprise Public Cloud Adoption
Enterprise Public Cloud Adoption
Enterprise Public Cloud Adoption 2016 vs. 2015
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Whereas 23 percent of enterprises are using Azure IaaS and 17 percent are using Azure PaaS,
26 percent are using either or both. 6 percent are using Google App Engine and 6 percent Google
IaaS, while 9 percent are using either or both Google IaaS and PaaS. After combining IaaS and
PaaS, the gap between AWS and Azure narrows, with Azure at almost half the AWS adoption.
AWS saw the largest year-over-year gains in the enterprise, going from 50 to 56 percent. Azure
IaaS also saw gains from 19 to 23 percent. Other public clouds showed only small changes up or
down, within the three percent margin of error.
SMB Public Cloud Adoption
SMB Public Cloud Adoption
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Among smaller organizations (less than 1,000 employees), AWS is in first (58 percent), followed by
Azure IaaS (13 percent) and Azure PaaS (10 percent). Interest levels for future adoption are highest
in Azure IaaS (32 percent) and Azure PaaS (28 percent).
Whereas 13 percent of SMBs are using Azure IaaS and 10 percent are using Azure PaaS, 15 percent
are using either or both. 7 percent are using Google App Engine and 6 percent are using Google
IaaS, while 11 percent are using either or both of Google IaaS and PaaS.
SMB Public Cloud Adoption 2016 vs. 2015
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AWS saw a small dip (61 to 58 percent) year-over-year in adoption by SMBs which is right at the
3 percent margin of error. There were significant increases in adoption of Azure IaaS (9 to 13
percent) and PaaS (6 to 10 percent). Small increases in VMware vCloud Air and IBM SoftLayer
(+2 percent) were also within the margin of error.
Public cloud adoption patterns remain different between larger enterprises and smaller
organizations. AWS remains in first place across both segments, followed by Azure IaaS and
Azure PaaS. The remaining rankings have significant differences. In the enterprise, VMware vCloud
Air is #4 and IBM SoftLayer is #5, with SoftLayer moving up 3 positions in the rankings over last
year. In the SMB segment, Google AppEngine is #4 followed by DigitalOcean at #5.
Top Public Clouds Used
Private Cloud Adoption 2016 vs. 2015
Private Cloud Adoption
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Private cloud adoption grows across all providers.The 2016 State of the Cloud Survey reveals that adoption of private cloud is growing across
all providers. Across all sizes of organizations, 44 percent percent of respondents leverage vSphere
environments as private clouds. OpenStack and VMware vCloud Suite tied for second at 19 percent.
In its first year on the survey, bare-metal clouds are being used by 15 percent of respondents.
29 percent of respondents are experimenting with or planning to use OpenStack, and 27 percent
are planning to use Microsoft Azure Pack.
In comparison to last year, there were noticeable increases in adoption rates of every private cloud
technology. VMware vSphere/vCenter went up eleven percent (33 to 44 percent). OpenStack and
VMware vCloud Suite both increased six percent (13 to 19 percent).
Enterprise Private Cloud
Enterprise Private Cloud Adoption 2016 vs. 2015
Enterprise Private Cloud Adoption
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Among enterprises, current private cloud usage was skewed toward traditional vendors — VMware
vSphere (60 percent), vCloud Suite (29 percent), and Microsoft System Center (22 percent). This
includes respondents who view their vSphere environment as a private cloud — whether or not it
meets the accepted definition of cloud computing. While OpenStack ranks fourth in current usage
by enterprises, it still leads the way in experiments and plans for use at 34 percent.
Compared to last year, all private cloud providers showed growth in enterprise adoption, with
the exception of CloudStack, which saw a slight decline (within the 3 percent margin of error).
SMB Private Cloud Usage
SMB Private Cloud Adoption 2016 vs. 2015
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Private cloud adoption by smaller organizations is lower overall than enterprises. While VMware
vSphere/vCenter (32 percent) is still the top option, OpenStack took second place in this group
with 17 percent already running applications. Bare-metal cloud, in its first year on the survey, was
the third option for SMBs. Once again, OpenStack has gained mindshare with 26 percent of SMBs
experimenting or planning to use it, and Microsoft Azure Pack also garners strong interest with
25 percent of enterprises experimenting or planning to use.
Year-over-year, several vendors made strong gains. VMware vSphere/vCenter was up from 23 to
32 percent, OpenStack rose from 10 to 17 percent, CloudStack more than doubled (6 to 13 percent),
and VMware vCloud Suite doubled (6 to 12 percent).
Top Private Clouds Used
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Comparing enterprises and SMBs, VMware vSphere/vCenter is in the top position for both groups.
OpenStack and bare-metal clouds rank next in SMBs, as compared to VMware vCloud Suite and
Microsoft System Center for enterprises.
Summary: Hybrid Cloud Adoption Hits Its Stride
The 2016 State of the Cloud Survey shows that cloud adoption is growing and hybrid cloud adoption
has now hit its stride. The strong growth in the use of private cloud, combined with the ubiquity of
public cloud means that a super-majority of organizations are now operating in a hybrid environment
Cloud benefits continued to grow, with the strongest gains in speed-to-infrastructure and speed-to-
market. Cloud Beginners saw the greatest gains this past year as cloud best practices became more
established and cloud providers improved their offerings.
With increasing maturity of both cloud users and cloud providers, we are seeing a reduction in
concerns about cloud security, but IT organizations are challenged by a shortage of trained resources
that they will need to fuel this growth. As adoption grows, cloud bills and cost concerns are also
growing, but most organizations are doing little to implement cost management and optimization
strategies. This represents an opportunity to reduce costs and further improve cloud ROI.
Within larger enterprises, the shift is well underway from shadow IT driven by individual teams to
a centralized approach that enables cloud consumption by brokering cloud services to the entire
organization. As enterprises gain alignment on the role of central IT, they are also improving their
cloud governance capabilities.
In the coming year, enterprises and newer cloud users are looking to move additional workloads to
cloud, while more experienced cloud users plan to optimize existing cloud usage to reduce costs.
39©2016 RightScale, Inc. All rights reserved. This work by RightScale is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The use of DevOps practices and tools continues to increase. Configuration management tools from
Ansible, Puppet, and Chef are growing, while Docker is spreading like wildfire.
Among public cloud providers, AWS maintains its lead, but Azure continues to make inroads in the
percentage of respondents running applications as well as those who have plans to use it.
All private cloud technologies saw growth in the 2016 survey, with VMware vSphere maintaining its
lead while OpenStack and Microsoft are generating strong interest. Bare-metal cloud is coming onto
the scene, especially among smaller organizations.
RightScale: A Universal Console to Manage All Your Clouds
In this multi-cloud world, organizations are looking for ways to broker and manage cloud applications
and services from a single pane of glass.
The RightScale Universal Cloud Management Platform enables you deliver self-service provisioning
and control to your cloud consumers, govern and manage all your cloud workloads from a single
console, and track and optimize your cloud usage and spend. In addition, RightScale supports
your DevOps and Docker initiatives by integrating with your existing tools to provide automated
infrastructure through the entire application lifecycle.
RightScale Services provides you with experts who can help you architect, implement, and automate
your cloud strategy. Our consulting team can help you choose the right cloud strategies, architect
your cloud environments, deploy cloud applications at scale, and automate the provisioning and
management of cloud workloads. They are here to share the lessons learned from years of experience
deploying thousands of cloud applications.
About RightScale
RightScale Universal Cloud Management enables leading enterprises to accelerate delivery
of cloud-based applications that engage customers and drive top-line revenue while
optimizing cloud usage to reduce risk and costs. With RightScale, IT organizations can
deliver instant access to a portfolio of public, private, and hybrid cloud services across
business units and development teams while maintaining enterprise control. RightScale
Consulting Services help companies develop cloud strategies, deliver cloud projects,
and optimize cloud usage. RightScale was named a “100 Best Places to Work in 2015”
by Outside Magazine and was listed in “The Best Enterprise Cloud Computing Startups
to Work For in 2015” by Forbes. Since 2007, leading enterprises including Audi, Pinterest,
and Yellow Pages Group have launched millions of servers through RightScale.
Become a Cloud Services Broker
In the white paper IT as a Cloud Services Broker: Provide Self-Service Access to Cloud, we explain
how IT can become a critical driver of business results through delivering cloud services.
Learn the benefits of becoming a cloud services broker for your enterprise and get actionable
advice including:
• 7 use cases for a cloud services portal
• A plan for providing developers with virtually instant access to infrastructure and
platform services
• Success factors for accelerating application delivery to drive growth and profitability
www.rightscale.com
Or call us at 1.888.989.1856
Download White Paper
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